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Yesterday I finally managed to get my seedlings up-potted. I've been trying to get there for a week now, lol! Got everything done except the onions. I'm going to do a whole bunch more seeding today.

I was hoping to get into the garden yesterday & get some more of the wreckage out from not doing fall cleanup in 2014, but didn't make it. Hopefully I'll get out there before the rain hits this afternoon.

So learn from my mistakes - it's easier (MUCH easier) to get stuff out while it's small!

What is everyone doing in their garden this month? I've got cleanup, planting, fixing my drip hoses, installing my Christmas present of everything I need for putting up plastic to warm things up & tulle for protecting from nasty buggies...

According to Gardenate.com, here's what we can be doing in zone 7b. There's a LOT:

March is one of the loveliest and most productive months in the Zone 7 garden. You can plant cool season veggies this month, but wait until April before putting out tomatoes and planting beans.

Our local 4H agent is selling blueberries and strawberry plants as a fundraiser. Both are excellent choices for edible landscapes, plus 4H and other youth gardening and farming opportunities are well worth supporting. Check around for similar programs where you live. Happy gardening!

Planting Preparation. It's time to plant cool spring vegetables, including broccoli, lettuce, spinach, greens, cabbage, chard and root crops, and cool season flowers like snaps and calendulas. You can still plant onion sets, peas and potatoes.

Seed Starting. It's time to start tomatoes, peppers and eggplants indoors, along with flowers like zinnias and cosmos. Wait to set out or plant warm season crops until next month (April 15 in our area).

Woody Plants. Before woody plants break dormancy and as they begin to bud out, take care of pruning chores and applications of preventatives such as dormant oil.

Preparing Beds. Prepare your garden beds deeply and well, especially for vegetables. However, don't try to work the soil—with spade, fork or tiller—until the soil is dry enough to crumble in your hand. Especially with our clay soils, be careful not to work them when wet. (Remember this is for vegetables only—most of the garden does not need regular tilling.).

Keep an Eye on Floating Row Covers. You may want to pull them back on unseasonably warm days, but don't remove them from the garden. Next thing you know it we'll have a freeze and you'll need them again.

Keep Pruning. Continue pruning fruit trees, landscape trees and shrubs. Remove dead or broken branches, crossing branches that rub another branch, and all dead and diseased wood. Also trim flowering shrubs like Forsythia and Japanese Camellia after they bloom.

Apple Health. Check with your extension agent to see when and if you need to treat your apple and pear blossoms with organically-approved agricultural streptomycin if fireblight is present in your area. Pears are extremely susceptible.

Flower Starting. Start warm season flowers like zinnias, marigolds and cosmos, along with any flowers you can't find in your local nurseries. Start perennial flowers now, too, like hollyhocks, Monarda, and many others. Set out any cool season flowers, like phlox, calendulas and snaps, that you started next month.

Don't Forget to Deadhead. Deadhead daffodils when blooms droop, but leave the leaves alone. Daffies need their leaves to recharge the bulbs for next year. Cut them back in a few weeks, after they turn brown. Deadhead those pansies, they will bloom longer and look better if you do. They also appreciate a feeding with fish emulsion or another organic fertilizer this month.

Start Mowing Fescue Again. Tall fescue needs to be at least 3 inches in height to outcompete the weeds. Mow at least once a week, never removing more that 1/3 of the leaf. The easiest way to handle the clippings is by grasscycling (i.e. leaving clippings on the lawn). Sometimes, the lawn generates so many clippings in the spring that I'll rake up a load and mix them into my compost.

Happy Houseplants. Repot any houseplants that need it in a good potting mix. Don't use an overly big pot, just graduate your pot up a step. If you've been rooting cuttings of Creeping Charlie, begonias, or other houseplants, plant them into pots when you see roots have forms.

We were also enjoying the nice weather yesterday. My boys found our seeds and ask if we could plant some. I foresee a trip to the garden shop in our near future to get some pots. Hope the storms were not that bad for you. We just got rain and thunder.

We had a meeting south of here yesterday afternoon. It was in the mid-40's when we arrived. By the time we left 2 hours later, temps had dropped 10 degrees and it was raining hard. By the time we got home, it was JUST above freezing & ice was on a truck in the driveway.

I am brand new to the boards and to gardening and glad to see an Atlanta advice area. We moved here from Los Angeles, so the weather is very different. But I never gardened there anyway.

When you do your seedlings do you use the same Mel's mix or just potting soil to start? I'll be doing one 4 by 4 raised garden box. Like you, I think I should start my indoor pots beyond the herbs I already have growing.

@mikki777 wrote:I am brand new to the boards and to gardening and glad to see an Atlanta advice area. We moved here from Los Angeles, so the weather is very different. But I never gardened there anyway.

When you do your seedlings do you use the same Mel's mix or just potting soil to start? I'll be doing one 4 by 4 raised garden box. Like you, I think I should start my indoor pots beyond the herbs I already have growing.

A lot of SFGers use the Mel's Mix to start their seedlings. I use a combination of bagged seed starting mixes. I mix them all up to get a varied medium. Jiffy, Vigaro, etc. Then add a little perilite and fine vermiculite. Works for me.

Sorry it's taken so long to answer you. Was out of town on business. Had horrible connections!

The last couple of years, I've started my plants in those Jiffy peat pellets that you soak in water till they swell up. But there's really no nutrients in them. When I up-pot, I use what I have on hand. This year, I found some potting mix, so I'm using that. But when I mix up some more MM, I'll save a good hunk and use it next year for seedlings.

@AtlantaMarie wrote:It looks like we MIGHT get a bit of a freeze this weekend, but then that's it... 35 on Sunday, 38 on Monday and up from there!

Yep, it doesn't look good for Sunday and Monday. My forecast says a low of 35 sunday and 33*F on Monday. So I will be waiting until after the soil warms back up again after Monday to plant out my peppers and tomatoes. Beds are prepared and ready to go.

Three seasons of experience out here has taught me that, in my neck of the woods, it's not a bad idea to baby my seedlings till the last week in May. Plus, I need to free up space where my garlic is now (I have full 4x4 worth). Good grief... what freaky weather Sunday and Monday.

I managed to get back out there this morning & pulled more weeds/grass/roots. Got the seedlings in the sun for a couple of hours getting hardened off. Listened to the birds fussing with each other. Had a wood pecker out the last couple of day looking for bugs. I hear him all over the neighborhood.

What a gorgeous day!

Cape Coddess - I have stevia!! One seed out of the 5 or 6 I stuck in that peat pot has germinated. Yea...!

@AtlantaMarie wrote:Cape Coddess - I have stevia!! One seed out of the 5 or 6 I stuck in that peat pot has germinated. Yea...!

When you said you planted 5 or 6 way back when, I meant to reply, "you need more like 20" but I must have been distracted and forgot. But 1 is a great start! Keep it going and you'll get more seeds from it eventually. And who knows, maybe the rest will sprout.

Waiting, waiting, waiting. My tomatoes need to be planted soon or up potted to a bigger pot. I have peppers ready to go in the ground. While I wait, I think I will plant some New Zealand Spinach and Malibar Spinach in cell packs while I wait. Just started some Amaranth (sp). I will direct sow most other things.

My average last frost date is March 28. Last frost date is April 15. So I will plant somewhere in between those dates. I have Agribon and 6 mil plastic but I think my plants will grow just about as well in their pots. They are outside all day and I only bring them in if it is going to be below 50*F at night.

I planted broccoli, peas, potatoes and chard a couple weeks ago. I fall planted leeks, garlic, onions, spinach, fava beans, carrots and shallots so I still have a lot going on in the garden.

Waiting, waiting, waiting. My tomatoes need to be planted soon or up potted to a bigger pot. I have peppers ready to go in the ground. While I wait, I think I will plant some New Zealand Spinach and Malibar Spinach in cell packs while I wait. Just started some Amaranth (sp). I will direct sow most other things.

My average last frost date is March 28. Last frost date is April 15. So I will plant somewhere in between those dates. I have Agribon and 6 mil plastic but I think my plants will grow just about as well in their pots. They are outside all day and I only bring them in if it is going to be below 50*F at night.

I planted broccoli, peas, potatoes and chard a couple weeks ago. I fall planted leeks, garlic, onions, spinach, fava beans, carrots and shallots so I still have a lot going on in the garden.

Yolos, I love to hear about your plans and/or what you've already got going. Frost date here is so tricky! My tomatoes are going to need to be put in larger pots too. I have garlic, onions and kale in my garden still.

I think I made a fatal mistake with my garlic. I never weeded it, well not till about early February. All the bulbs are quite small as a result. I wanted to ask: Did you add some more compost to your garlic? If you did, when did you (or when are you going to).

So far the only thing I have done to my garlic is add some blood meal about 2 weeks ago. They look fairly good but not as good as last year. The stems do not seem to be as thick. We shall see.

Most of my shallots died over the winter. I don't think I am going to plant them again next year. If I plant in the fall, many die. If I plant in the spring, they don't get very big.

Leeks are doing okay but for some reason they divided back in Dec and now I have two leeks growing next to each other. This happened to about 75% of the leeks I planted in the fall (Bonnie Transplants). I direct seeded some in the fall and just transplanted them to different parts of the garden to see what happens.

@yolos wrote:So far the only thing I have done to my garlic is add some blood meal about 2 weeks ago. They look fairly good but not as good as last year. The stems do not seem to be as thick. We shall see.

Most of my shallots died over the winter. I don't think I am going to plant them again next year. If I plant in the fall, many die. If I plant in the spring, they don't get very big.

Leeks are doing okay but for some reason they divided back in Dec and now I have two leeks growing next to each other. This happened to about 75% of the leeks I planted in the fall (Bonnie Transplants). I direct seeded some in the fall and just transplanted them to different parts of the garden to see what happens.

Ok, it's a bit reassuring to hear that your garlic is also on the small side (although I'm also sad for us). Perhaps our recent roller coaster weather had something to do with it.